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Mailing List Logs for ShadowRN

Message no. 1
From: "Robert J. Waters" <rjwate01@*****.louisville.edu>
Subject: Archive Site
Date: Sun, 23 Jun 1996 16:22:08 -0500 (EDT)
I was wondering where the archive of postings for this mailing list are
located.

Luc AKA BobW
Message no. 2
From: "Damion Milliken" <dam01@***.edu.au>
Subject: Re: Archive Site
Date: Mon, 24 Jun 1996 14:46:17 +1000 (EST)
Robert J. Waters writes:

> I was wondering where the archive of postings for this mailing list are
> located.

Read the FAQ!

For your convenience, here is the relevant part:

[...Looks into FAQs...]

Hmmm, it seems that they have not yet been updated since we moved to iTribe
- the info still says "go look at HEARN".

Well, since it isn't in the FAQ, what you might want to do is this:

Send an email to majordomo@********.itribe.net, with a blank subject line,
and a single line in the message saying "help". You will be sent useful
commands.

One of the relevant commands that you will be sent is "index <list>". You
can send a command to majordomo (as above) with the line "index shadowrn" in
the body, and you will be sent a list of the archive files for the list.
Unfortunately, it seems that the archives only go back about 3 days or so
(or did last time I looked).

Once you know the names of the archive files (which are actually based on the
dates that they were made, but anyhow), you can send a command to majordomo
(as above) with the line "get shadowrn <file>", and you will be sent the
log
file that you specify.

--
Damion Milliken University of Wollongong E-mail: dam01@***.edu.au

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Message no. 3
From: "Robert J. Waters" <rjwate01@*****.louisville.edu>
Subject: Re: Archive Site
Date: Mon, 24 Jun 1996 03:53:14 -0500 (EDT)
> Read the FAQ!

I did and it isn't up to date

> For your convenience, here is the relevant part:
>
> [...Looks into FAQs...]
>
> Hmmm, it seems that they have not yet been updated since we moved to iTribe
> - the info still says "go look at HEARN".
>
> Well, since it isn't in the FAQ, what you might want to do is this:
>
> Send an email to majordomo@********.itribe.net, with a blank subject line,
> and a single line in the message saying "help". You will be sent useful
> commands.

Did that already and actually I saved results to my folder for shadowrn

> One of the relevant commands that you will be sent is "index <list>".
You
> can send a command to majordomo (as above) with the line "index shadowrn"
in
> the body, and you will be sent a list of the archive files for the list.
> Unfortunately, it seems that the archives only go back about 3 days or so
> (or did last time I looked).

I am looking for archives that go farther back than that so that I can catchup
with the list seeing as it has been about a year since I was on plus with all
the account probs i've had I wasnt getting all my mail for awhile.


Any location of archives (seeing as I can only find shadowtk archives) is
greatly appreciated. Also before people start saying it...i presently dont
have web access since they mis-installed lynx and it keeps core dumping
everytime it is runned.

Luc AKA BobW
Message no. 4
From: Robert Watkins <robertdw@*******.net.au>
Subject: Re: Archive Site
Date: Mon, 24 Jun 96 17:56:57 +1100
>I am looking for archives that go farther back than that so that I can
>catchup
>with the list seeing as it has been about a year since I was on plus with
>all
>the account probs i've had I wasnt getting all my mail for awhile.

Why bother? We'll talk about it all again, anyway. :)

(Oh yeah, I'm back again... it's been a busy month)


--
Robert Watkins robertdw@*******.com.au
Real Programmers never work 9 to 5. If any real programmers
are around at 9 am, it's because they were up all night.

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Disclaimer

These messages were posted a long time ago on a mailing list far, far away. The copyright to their contents probably lies with the original authors of the individual messages, but since they were published in an electronic forum that anyone could subscribe to, and the logs were available to subscribers and most likely non-subscribers as well, it's felt that re-publishing them here is a kind of public service.